There have been ongoing debates about how the use of slang on the Internet influences language usage outside of technology. Even though the direct causal relationship between the Internet and language has yet to be proven by any scientific research,[20] Internet slang has invited split views on its influence on the standard of language use in non-computer-mediated communications.
Prescriptivists tend to have the widespread belief that the Internet has a negative influence on the future of language, and that it would lead to a degradation of standard.[9] Some would even attribute any declination of standard formal English to the increase in usage of electronic communication.[20] It has also been suggested that the linguistic differences between Standard English and CMC can have implications for literacy education.[21] This is illustrated by the widely reported example of a school essay submitted by a Scottish teenager, which contained many abbreviations and acronyms likened to SMS language. There was great condemnation of this style by the mass media as well as educationists, who expressed that this showed diminishing literacy or linguistic abilities.[22]
On the other hand, descriptivists have counter-argued that the Internet allows better expressions of a language.[20] Rather than established linguistic conventions, linguistic choices sometimes reflect personal taste.[23] It has also been suggested that as opposed to intentionally flouting language conventions, Internet slang is a result of a lack of motivation to monitor speech online.[24] Hale and Scalon describe language in Emails as being derived from "writing the way people talk", and that there is no need to insist on 'Standard' English.[12] English users, in particular, have an extensive tradition of etiquette guides, instead of traditional prescriptive treatises, that offer pointers on linguistic appropriateness.[23] Using and spreading Internet slang also adds onto the cultural currency of a language.[25] It is important to the speakers of the language due to the foundation it provides for identifying within a group, and also for defining a person’s individual linguistic and communicative competence.[25] The result is a specialized subculture based on its use of slang.[26]
In scholarly research, attention has, for example, been drawn to the effect of the use of Internet slang in ethnography, and more importantly to how conversational relationships online change structurally because slang is used.[25]
In German, there is already considerable controversy regarding the use of anglicisms outside of CMC.[27] This situation is even more problematic within CMC, since the jargon of the medium is dominated by English terms.[11] An extreme example of an anti-anglicisms perspective can be observed from the chatroom rules of a Christian site,[28] which bans all anglicisms ("Das Verwenden von Anglizismen ist strengstens untersagt!"), and also translates even fundamental terms into German equivalents.
Patrick Abboud
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